• Get Involved
  • News
      • Back
      • Featured Key articles
      • Forums Have your say
  • Campaigns
      • Back
      • Routes Space for Cycling on roads
      • Neighbourhoods Liveable, low traffic streets
          • Back
          • Bath & NE Somerset
          • Bristol
          • North Somerset
          • South Gloucestershire
      • Influence Vision and political leadership
      • Cycling for All Safe and inclusive
      • Road Justice Enforcement & investigations
      • Consultations Speaking up for cycling
  • Activities
      • Back
      • Diary
      • Suggest a change
      • Bristol Bike Shops
      • Route Planner
      • Rides
  • About us
      • Back
      • FAQ
      • Useful Information
      • Contact Us
      • Log In/Out

Wordle word map from S4C survey 2016 resuts

22 August 2016

Comments

Leave a Reply

Click here to cancel reply.

You must be logged in to post a comment.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Support Bristol Cycling!
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS Feed

Latest Posts

  • Bristol Cycling Campaign calls for 1,000 bike hangars
  • Bristol Cycling Cycle Hangars Project
  • Could you be Bristol’s Bicycle Mayor?
  • Bristol Parents for School Streets
  • Cycle hangers, Liveable Neighbourhoods, elections

Featured – selection of key articles

  • 6 reasons to make cycling to work your New Year's resolution +

    Cycling rates are increasing year on year in Bristol. However, the motor car is still the dominant transport mode for commuting in the UK. So why not make your New Year's resolution to leave the car at home and get on your bike to and from the office. Here are 6 good reasons why it makes sense: Weight loss. Potentially the most common resolution, but how many people actually stick out the tedium of the… Read More
  • Why do a few cars get half the space on Prince St Bridge? +

    In 2017 Prince Street Bridge was reopened after major repairs. This was shortly followed by a separated cycle path on Prince Street connecting Broad Quay and Cumberland Road. We have looked at the usage figures from the most recent count by Bristol City Council, which took place in July 2019. Our handy infographic shows the huge change that is possible with quality infrastructure. Numbers of people walking and cycling have doubled, while car use has… Read More
  • 7 Reasons Einstein would support 20 mph +

    ACTION: Please take a moment to respond to the Bristol 20mph Review Our lives fundamentally rely on energy. It puts food on our table, gets us to and from work, powers our offices and factories. The more we use, the more money it costs us. Our demand for it causes wars, our generation of it emits harmful gases. Almost every issue 20mph raises is energy related and the answer to each, along with many of… Read More
  • The staggering cost of motoring +

    Last month many of you will have received Bristol Councils "Council tax explained" leaflet, explaining where our council tax pounds are spent. The centre page of this is an infographic summarising costs per household. Transport services set us back £83.52 and highways £29.26. Reading into the images used, this might be interpreted as tax payers forking out 3 times more for cycling and public transport than highways infrastructure (which cyclists also use). However regardless of… Read More
  • The Downs. No Cycling? Or a car-free leisure route? +

    Why we need space for cycling on the Downs. The annual Cycle Sunday event is a brilliant way to demonstrate the huge demand for car-free cycling around the Downs to the Downs Committee, who manage this beautiful area. (To those unfamiliar with Bristol, the Clifton and Durdham Downs lie to the north of the city centre and overlook the ecologically significant Avon Gorge). We can expect between one and three thousand people to attend these… Read More
  • A Modest Proposal #4: Clanage Road Roundabout and the Festival Way +

    If you want to scare yourself rigid, pop along to Clanage Road roundabout on any weekday in term time at 3.15pm. That's the time that 1,500 kids pour out of Ashton Park School and onto the fast busy roundabout on the A369. This is a key hub on the F11 Inner Orbital Cycling Freeway in the BCyC strategic cycle network and close to F8 Festival Way Quietway. BCyC members have been working with local residents… Read More
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
› ‹
© 2015 - 2020 Bristol Cycling Campaign
Terms & conditions | FAQ | Join us | Log in/out | Contact